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The Prime Minister was in Newark today to lend a helping hand to his party's campaign in the by-election. It was triggered after the long-serving Conservative MP Patrick Mercer resigned from his party, and then gave up his seat, after a cash for questions scandal.

The Tories have won the last three elections there. Adam Fowler's been with them as they worked to win another.

On a visit to Newark David Cameron tells Calendar reporter Adam Fowler he thoroughly enjoyed his impromptu dinner at a Nandos restaurant in Bristol. The Prime Minister said he 'just felt like some peri peri chicken' - his visit ruffling a few feathers amongst regular diners there last night.

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Former Tory MP, Patrick Mercer's conduct in the cash for questions scandal has been described as the worst ever dealt with by the parliamentary standards watchdog. He resigned his Newark seat earlier this week.

It ruled he had knowingly and deliberately broken the rules for personal gain.

Mr Mercer had insisted he had been acting in good faith unaware he was being filmed by undercover reporters. Alison Mackenzie reports from Westminster:

Disgraced former MP Patrick Mercer's cash for questions scandal was the worst breach of parliamentary rules on lobbying dealt with by a sleaze watchdog, it has said.

Disgraces MP Patrick Mercer Credit: Press Association

The ex-Tory minister quit his Newark seat in disgrace on Tuesday ahead of the publication of a report today that would have banned him from the House of Commons for six months.

Details of the investigation into allegations that he had tabled Commons questions and offered a Westminster security pass after signing a deal that paid him £4,000 have now been published and show Mr Mercer "deliberately evaded" rules and "inflicted significant reputational damage" on Parliament.

The suspension the Standards Committee had planned to impose on the former Army colonel would have been the longest it had meted out to an MP since 1947, with the exception former Labour MP Denis MacShane, who was convicted of criminal offences.

Its report states: "We are not aware of a case relating to a sitting MP which has involved such a sustained and pervasive breach of the House's rules on registration, declaration and paid advocacy."

The by-election sparked by his decision to quit the Nottinghamshire seat will be held on June 5.